... the 5th story from the IUFRO.
Palle
>> IUFRO Headquarters <office(a)iufro.org>
15/02/2010 09:07 >>>
Dear Palle,
We are releasing our fifth story relating to the themes of the XXIII IUFRO World Congress:
BUSHMEAT: BEYOND THE ECOLOGICAL CRISIS.
The main issue of this release deals with the threat from the hunting of rare tropical
forest species to be traded on illegal markets and how on the contrary, traditional
African societies consume bushmeat for other reasons than simply profit.
Please be reminded that you can comment this release on our blog and directly give your
feedback to IUFRO:
http://theiufroblog.wordpress.com/
Many thanks for your cooperation,
Peter
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Dr. Peter Mayer - Executive Director
International Union of Forest Research Organizations
IUFRO Headquarters - Secretariat
Mariabrunn (BFW), Hauptstrasse 7 - 1140 Vienna, Austria
Tel.: +43-1-877 0151-0 - Fax: +43-1-877 0151-50
Website:
http://www.iufro.org - Email:
mayer(at)iufro.org
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BUSHMEAT: BEYOND THE ECOLOGICAL CRISIS
5th in a series of releases related to the XXIII IUFRO World Congress
English (pdf) - Espanol (pdf) - Francais (pdf) - Deutsch (pdf)
(Vienna, 15 February 2010) - Contemporary African societies are a mix of modernized,
western society and traditional African roots. Those traditions mean that people - rural
and urban - still consume bushmeat for reasons linked to culture, taste and attachment to
healthy, natural products.
However, the scale of hunting occurring in Central Africa poses a threat to many tropical
forest species. The response to this has typically been legal: ban the trade in bushmeat
and criminalize the hunters and consumers.
This, said Nathalie Van Vliet, Bushmeat strategic advisor for TRAFFIC, has not been
terribly effective. The trade continues to flourish but in a hidden economy that makes it
more difficult to manage or control.
Those in the bushmeat trade who make money out of the commercialisation of rare species
for the urban markets need to be strictly controlled. However, those who eat bushmeat for
their own nutrition or sell bushmeat to pay for medicines or school fees, should not be
presented as criminals," she says.
Dr. Van Vliet will coordinate a session dealing with the hunting of bushmeat in Central
Africa at the 2010 IUFRO World Congress in Seoul.
She hopes her session will reach beyond conservationists to also integrate the input of
social, health and economic stakeholders to help develop more integrated bushmeat
strategies and policies.
You may find the original story with links to translations, media contacts and
illustrations here:
http://www.iufro.org/media/iwc2010-news-stories/feb10-bushmeat/.